Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04976621 |
Other study ID # |
D3578-P |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
February 15, 2022 |
Est. completion date |
June 30, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
May 2024 |
Source |
VA Office of Research and Development |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Depression is common after traumatic brain injury (TBI) and may have wide-ranging
consequences. Post-TBI depression may impede reintegration into the family and community and
lead to lower quality of life and heightened suicide risk. It may also interfere with
rehabilitation. Yet, current treatments for post-TBI depression are based largely on expert
opinion rather than evidence from rigorous studies.
Behavioral activation (BA) is a promising intervention for post-TBI depression. It is a brief
behavioral treatment that helps people define goals, create and execute plans to reach them,
and engage in meaningful activities. BA has been tested in clinical trials since the 1970s
and has been shown to reduce or prevent depression in populations with diverse medical
conditions. However, BA has rarely been used or studied for treatment of depression in a TBI
population.
The investigators will conduct a study of BA with 40 Veterans with TBI and depressive
symptoms in VA outpatient rehabilitation care. One group of Veterans will be randomly
assigned to receive BA plus usual care. The BA program consists of six sessions delivered
over three months at the VA (or Veterans' homes, if preferred) by an occupational therapist
(OT). A second group of Veterans will be randomly assigned to receive usual care. The
investigators will assess the feasibility of delivering the BA intervention in the
rehabilitation setting and its acceptability to Veterans and staff. The research team will
also assess participant responses to BA in the outcomes of depressive symptoms, community
reintegration, and quality of life. Study findings will be used to guide the development of a
future study of BA in a larger sample of Veterans with post-TBI depression.
This study and future research may add a powerful clinical tool to rehabilitation services to
lessen or prevent depression in Veterans with TBI. Reducing depression may in turn facilitate
rehabilitation and enhance community reintegration, allowing Veterans to engage more fully in
their families and communities.
Description:
Objectives: Nearly 400,000 Veterans have been diagnosed with traumatic brain injury (TBI)
since 2000, representing up to 22% of combat casualties. Depression is one of the most
prevalent and serious of TBI sequelae. Post-TBI depression adversely affects rehabilitation,
treatment adherence, community reintegration (CR), quality of life (QOL), social
relationships, and caregiver burden. Yet, post-TBI depression remains under-assessed,
undertreated, and under-studied. No clinical guidelines for post-TBI depression treatment
exist, and current treatment is largely based on expert opinion rather than evidence from
controlled clinical trials.
A promising therapeutic approach to post-TBI depression is Behavioral Activation (BA), a
brief and pragmatic treatment rigorously tested since the 1970s in clinical trials for
depression in diverse clinical populations. BA helps individuals set goals, create plans, and
engage in activities that improve mood and maintain social connectedness - making it
well-suited to treating depression in a TBI population that struggles to set goals and is
prone to social isolation. BA can accommodate hallmark deficits of TBI such as deficits in
memory, organization, planning, initiation, emotion regulation, and interpersonal
functioning. It can be delivered by professionals routinely available in VA outpatient
rehabilitation services (e.g., occupational therapists, nurses, psychologists, social
workers) and, therefore, can be deployed in rehabilitation settings.
The proposed research will assess the feasibility of a BA protocol adapted for post-TBI
depression in an outpatient VA rehabilitation setting. Specific study objectives are to: (1)
assess BA's acceptability to Veterans and staff and other feasibility indicies, (2) provide
preliminary evidence of participant response in the outcomes of depressive symptoms, CR, and
QOL at the 3-month follow-up interview, (3) develop the BA protocol and manual to be tested
in a larger randomized controlled trial (RCT) in the future, and (4) explore engagement in
activity as the mechanism that underlies BA intervention effects on outcomes.
Research Design: This feasibility study includes a pilot randomized controlled trail to
examine participant response.
Methodology: This feasibility study will enroll 40 male and female Veterans receiving care at
a VAMC Rehabilitation Medicine Service and meeting study criteria for TBI and depression.
Veterans will be randomly assigned to BA plus treatment as usual (TAU) or control (TAU). The
BA program consists of six sessions delivered over 3 months at the VA (or the Veteran's home,
as preferred by Veteran) by an occupational therapist (OT). All Veterans are interviewed at
baseline before randomization and 3 months later by a blinded interviewer. Both interviews
assess Veterans' depressive symptoms, CR, and QOL, using standardized instruments.
Feasibility will be assessed in six domains: acceptability to Veterans and clinic staff;
process (recruitment, refusal, and retention rates; study completion; eligibility criteria;
and number of sessions attended); practicality (resources and constraints imposed by the
setting); safety; participant comprehension of interviews and the intervention; and research
burden (length of interviews, participant fatigue, and emotional distress). After the
follow-up interview, phone interviews with BA participants and with clinic staff will be
conducted to capture acceptability and their experience with BA. These qualitative and
quantitative methods are designed to test the feasibility of a future RCT, identify the
barriers and facilitators to implementation of BA in the rehabilitation setting, and describe
Veterans' experiences with BA.
Impact/Significance: This study and line of research has the potential to advance knowledge
by identifying a feasible and efficacious approach to preventing and/or mitigating depression
among Veterans with TBI, a clinical population at high risk for depression and its sequelae.
Findings will be used to inform the development of a future RCT powered to test BA's efficacy
in a larger sample of Veterans with post-TBI depression.